I don't care what his handicap is, as you point out the only defense the course has in that circumstance is the firmness of the greens. When are we going to wake up in this country and realize that water is an extraordinarily precious resource, and stop using it to make greens soft enough to stop a golf ball?
My first trip across the pond was back in '83, a wedding in Ireland. I brought a buddy's clubs, and we wandered around in a rental car playing links golf (extraordinarily cheap back then). On the first hole at Ballybunion my buddy Rick, a huge hitter, smashed a three wood down the middle, leaving himself with 135 or 140 yards in, not much breeze. He hit his usual moon shot with a wedge, which proceeded to hit the middle of the green, bounce some 40' in air, and off the back into the long stuff. When the cackling stopped, he chopped out and made double. Adjustment necessary? No question. But unfair? No way.